

The closest thing I've found around Rochester to NY-style pizza is that served up by the Pizza Stop on State St. downtown. It's in an unassuming storefront location that looks as if it could be on any busy street in the Big Apple, and the pizza lives up to that appearance. The crust is thin and foldable, with a good bready flavor. Look at the underside and you'll also see a little charring from the hot, hot ovens - a rarity in this area except for restaurants with wood-fired ovens (which tend to disappoint me, but that's a post for another day). When you stop in for a slice or to pick up your pie (they don't deliver), you'll notice that the ovens are wrapped in heat-reflective insulation to keep the indoor temperature bearable. I don't know if that's because the ovens are unusually hot to begin with, but I'm guessing that the insulation also makes the temperature inside the oven even higher. In any event, the result is a nicely charred pie, which is not the same as burnt. Most pizza places around here keep their oven temps too low to get that effect; their pizzas come out brown on the bottom; if they leave them in longer, the pizzas simply get burnt, with the flavor and texture of burnt toast. A charred pizza has a crust that i

s pleasantly crisp on the outside but still bready and chewy on the interior. In NYC, it's commonplace, but as I said, in this area it's sadly all too rare.
Anyway, back to the Pizza Stop. The crust is the star, as it should be, but the sauce and cheese are worthy supporting players. Neither is overdone here, and they're uniformly distributed across the surface (I am not among those pizza aficionados who think that the cheese should be applied here and there, with pockets of sauce poking through - I want cheese in every bite).
The Pizza Stop does serve square slices of thick-crust, "Sicilian" pizza as well, but I don't think I've ever tried it; I figure every bite of it would be one less bite I could take of their thin-crust pizza, and I can't bring myself to do that.
As I said, Pizza Stop doesn't deliver, and it is only open on weekdays till 5:30 (7:30 on Fridays). At lunchtime it's not unusual to see a line out the door. There is some ind

oor seating. They don't do wings or subs. I think there is some sort of pasta and maybe one or two other things on the menu but I can't say I've ever seen anybody eating anything here but pizza, which is entirely understandable. If you love NY-style pizza, you owe it to yourself to get to the Pizza Stop. I give it a solid "A".
Pizza Stop, 123 State St. 546-7252
Mon. - Thu. 10:30 - 5:30, Fri. 10:30 - 7:30. Closed weekends.
[Pizza Guy's note: go
here to read my interview with Pizza Stop owner Jim Staffieri.]
5 comments:
The BEST pizza in Rochester, hands down. I hope Joe's Brooklyn is on your list. I hear it is the same folks as the Pizza Stop. But I am hoping you can either prove or disprove this before I waste time.
I certainly intend to get there. Now that I know somebody's interested I'll try to get to it sooner rather than later.
My understanding, by the way, is that it's owned by the brother of the Pizza Stop owner.
I went to Joe's Brooklyn today - I wouldn't get your hopes up. Badly organized and VERY rude - shouted at my buddy to leave when he complaining about his pizza being undercooked - and refused to give him his money back.
I've seen some similar comments about rudeness at Joe's Brooklyn on the rocwiki site. I'll withhold judgment until I've been there but it doesn't sound promising. Maybe rudeness is supposed to be part of the "New York City" experience ;) But I'll see for myself.
The staff at Pizza Stop, while we're on the subject, is not exactly a model of friendliness, but I haven't seen outright rudeness either.
The best pizza I've had in my life. Wrt the previous comment - you don't fuck around at Pizza stop. Don't ask to see a menu, don't ask what pizza they have today - just point at what you want pay for your order and move on. That's the Pizza Stop way. If you feel the need to complain, expect to be thrown on your ass. If you have the balls to chat on your cell phone while waiting in line, or while placing an order - expect to be thrown out on your ass.
Maybe, just maybe, if you are a loyal customer for over a decade they may actually aknowledge your existence. You may even get a thank you as you walk out the door.
This is the Pizza Stop way - and if you can't handle it, then you are not worthy of the Best Pizza in the World.
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